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Soil moisture, stressed vegetation and the spatial structure of soil erosion in a high latitude rangeland

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Cutler_2023_EJSS_Soil_moisture_CC.pdf (4.146Mb)
Date
03/07/2023
Author
Cutler, N. A.
Kodl, G.
Streeter, R. T.
Thompson, P. I. J.
Dugmore, A. J.
Keywords
Biogeomorphology
Andosol
Soil degradation
Aeolian erosion
NDVI
Rofabard
GE Environmental Sciences
NDAS
SDG 13 - Climate Action
MCC
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Abstract
Soil erosion has been a persistent problem in high-latitude regions and may worsen as climate change unfolds and encourages increased anthropogenic exploitation. We propose that soil moisture is likely to shape future erosion trends, as moisture stress reduces the capacity of vegetation cover to retard erosive processes. However, the spatial variability of soil moisture in high-latitude soils—and the ways in which this variability drives the spatial distribution of erosion features—is poorly understood. We addressed this knowledge gap with a study of andosol erosion in southern Iceland. Our study used a combination of high-resolution (10 m from eroded terrain. We found lower moisture availability close to existing erosion features: mean volumetric soil moisture content varied from 17% (proximal to erosion patch) to 36% (distal to erosion patch). We also found that variability in soil moisture decreased with distance from eroded areas: the coefficient of variation (CV) in soil moisture varied from 0.33 (proximal to erosion patch) to 0.13 (distal to erosion). Our findings indicate that the margins of erosion patches have a stressful soil environment due to exposure to the atmosphere. The vegetation in these locations grows less vigorously, and the exposed soil becomes more vulnerable to erosion, leading to erosion patch expansion and coalescence. If these conditions hold more generally, they may represent a feedback mechanism that facilitates the lateral propagation of soil erosion in high-latitude regions.
Citation
Cutler , N A , Kodl , G , Streeter , R T , Thompson , P I J & Dugmore , A J 2023 , ' Soil moisture, stressed vegetation and the spatial structure of soil erosion in a high latitude rangeland ' , European Journal of Soil Science , vol. 74 , no. 4 , e13393 . https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.13393
Publication
European Journal of Soil Science
Status
Peer reviewed
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.13393
ISSN
1351-0754
Type
Journal article
Rights
Copyright © 2023 The Authors. European Journal of Soil Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Society of Soil Science. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Description
Funding: Research was supported by a NERC PhD studentship (ref: NE/L002558/) to Polly Thompson and a World-Leading Scholarship, funded by St Leonard’s Postgraduate College, University of St Andrews, to Georg Kodl.
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  • University of St Andrews Research
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10023/27872

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